Toxicity of methylmercury (MeHg) to wildlife and humans results from its binding to cysteine residues of proteins, forming MeHg-cysteinate (MeHgCys) complexes that hinder biological functions. MeHgCys complexes can be detoxified in vivo, yet how this occurs is unknown. We report that MeHgCys complexes are transformed into selenocysteinate [Hg(Sec)4] complexes in multiple animals from two phyla (a waterbird, freshwater fish, and earthworms) sampled in different geographical areas and contaminated by different Hg sources. In addition, high energy-resolution X-ray absorption spectroscopy (HR-XANES) and chromatography-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry of the waterbird liver support the binding of Hg(Sec)4 to selenoprotein P and biomineralization of Hg(Sec)4 to chemically inert nanoparticulate mercury selenide (HgSe). The results provide a foundation for understanding mercury detoxification in higher organisms and suggest that the identified MeHgCys to Hg(Sec)4 demethylation pathway is common in nature.In this work, a new high-volume, continuous particle separation device that separates based upon size and charge is described. Two continuous flow-electrical-split-flow lateral transport thin (Fl-El-SPLITT) device architectures (a platinum electrode on a porous membrane and a porous graphite electrode under a membrane) were developed and shown to improve particle separations over a purely electrical-SPLITT device. The graphite FL-El-SPLITT device architecture achieved the best separation of approximately 60% of small (28 nm) vs large (1000 nm) polystyrene particles. Fl-El-SPLITT (platinum) achieved a 75% separation on a single pass using these same particles. Fl-El-SPLITT (platinum) achieved a moderate 26% continuous separation of U87 glioma cell-derived small extracellular vesicles (EVs) from medium EVs. Control parameter testing showed that El-SPLITT continuously directed particle motility within a channel to exit a selected port based upon the applied voltage using either direct current or alternating current. The transition from one port to the other was dependent upon the voltage applied. Both large and small polystyrene particles transitioned together rather than separating at each of the applied voltages. These data present the first ever validation of El-SPLITT in continuous versus batch format. The Fl-El-SPLITT device architecture, monitoring, and electrical and fluid interfacing systems are described in detail for the first time. Capabilities afforded to the system by the flow addition include enhanced particle separation as well as the ability to filter out small particles or desalinate fluids. High-throughput continuous separations based upon electrophoretic mobility will be streamlined by this new technique that combines electrical and flow fields into a single device.New complexes of neptunyl(V) isothiocyanate with 4'-aryl-substituted 2,2'6',2″-terpyridines (Terpy) and N,N-dimethylacetamide (DMA) were obtained [(NpO2)(4'-Ph-Terpy)(DMA)(NCS)]?DMA, [(NpO2)(4'-(4-(CF3)C6H4)-Terpy)(DMA)(NCS)]?2H2O?DMA, [(NpO2)(4'-(3-BrC6H4)-Terpy)(DMA)(NCS)]?DMA, and [(NpO2)(4'-(2-(COOH)C6H4)-Terpy)(DMA)(NCS)]?DMA. The structures of the compounds were determined with X-ray diffraction analysis. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/Elesclomol.html The neptunium coordination polyhedra were found to be pentagonal bipyramids with O atoms of the NpO2 groups in the apical positions and the equatorial planes formed by three N atoms of the terpyridine ligand, a N atom of the isothiocyanate anion, and an O atom of DMA. The influence of the substituents of the Ar group on the crystal structure is discussed. The IR spectra contain well-resolved bands of characteristic vibrations of all groups in the complex. The electronic absorption spectra are typical for neptunium(V) complexes and contain an intense narrow absorption band belonging to an f-f transition with a maximum of 988 nm and several long-wave satellites of lower intensity. The substituted terpyridines were shown to be efficient for the extraction of various valence forms of neptunium from the isothiocyanate solutions.The permeability-controllable potentiometric fluorescent probes that can visually discriminate near-zero and normal situations of cell membrane potential were reported for the first time. Different from traditional potentiometric probes that utilize fluorescence intensity to reflect membrane potential, CQ12 and CP12 have different localizations under the two situations of cell membrane potential. Thus, the two situations can be point-to-point indicated by two fluorescent images with an obvious difference, avoiding complex operations and calibration of conventional methods.Since most d-amino acids (DAAs) are utilized by bacterial cells but not by mammalian eukaryotic hosts, recently DAA-based molecular imaging strategies have been extensively explored for noninvasively differentiating bacterial infections from the host's inflammatory responses. Given glutamine's pivotal role in bacterial survival, cell growth, biofilm formation, and even virulence, here we report a new positron emission tomography (PET) imaging approach using d-5-[11C]glutamine (d-[5-11C]-Gln) for potential clinical assessment of bacterial infection through a comparative study with its l-isomer counterpart, l-[5-11C]-Gln. In both control and infected mice, l-[5-11C]-Gln had substantially higher uptake levels than d-[5-11C]-Gln in most organs except the kidneys, showing the expected higher use of l-[5-11C]-Gln by mammalian tissues and more efficient renal excretion of d-[5-11C]-Gln. Importantly, our work demonstrates that PET imaging with d-[5-11C]-Gln is capable of detecting infections induced by both Escherichia coli (E. coli) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in a dual-infection murine myositis model with significantly higher infection-to-background contrast than with l-[5-11C]-Gln (in E. coli, 1.64; in MRSA, 2.62, p = 0.0004). This can be attributed to the fact that d-[5-11C]-Gln is utilized by bacteria while being more efficiently cleared from the host tissues. We confirmed the bacterial infection imaging specificity of d-[5-11C]-Gln by comparing its uptake in active bacterial infections versus sterile inflammation and with 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoroglucose ([18F]FDG). These results together demonstrate the translational potential of PET imaging with d-[5-11C]-Gln for the noninvasive detection of bacterial infectious diseases in humans.